Kapat
0 Ürün
Alışveriş sepetinizde boş.
Kategoriler
    Filtreler
    Preferences
    Ara

    T.S. Eliot's Poetics of Politics: The Dystopia of the Waste Land

    Yayınevi : Orion Kitabevi
    Yazar : Metin Boşnak
    ISBN :9786257294256
    Sayfa Sayısı :145
    Baskı Sayısı :1
    Ebatlar :14.00 x 20.00
    Basım Yılı :2021
    110,00 ₺
    93,50 ₺

    Tükendi

    Tahmini Kargoya Veriliş Zamanı: 2-4 iş günü içerisinde tedarik edilip kargoya verilecektir.
    Eliot's The Waste land is a contemporary dystopia interlinked with a plethora of dystopian works that have proliferated, especially in the last two centuries. This study attemmpting to consider The Waste Land in the dystopian paradigm is a new approach to an old theme. The subversive paradigm is precisely how 'the Waste Land's dystopian potics operates, subverting its so-called "sources," mostly anthropological ones such as J. Weston's From Ritual to Romance and J. G. Frazer's The Golden Bough (1920), and almost parodying them. Dystopian works have emerged as a reaction to or counter-attack on utopios. 'The words,'Shantih shantih shantih (433)" close The Waste Land and come out like an 'amen" to a Christian's prayers. The"amen refers onay to the wish that the prayers should be accepted: it does not guarantee that the wish will be granted or that salvation will be realized. Consequently, Eliot's dystopic The Waste Land does not lead nı salvation. and the suggested means for salvation totally lack in the here and the now. Metin Boşnak is a published poet, essayist, and scholar of Comparative Literature and American Studies at Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University.
    Eliot's The Waste land is a contemporary dystopia interlinked with a plethora of dystopian works that have proliferated, especially in the last two centuries. This study attemmpting to consider The Waste Land in the dystopian paradigm is a new approach to an old theme. The subversive paradigm is precisely how 'the Waste Land's dystopian potics operates, subverting its so-called "sources," mostly anthropological ones such as J. Weston's From Ritual to Romance and J. G. Frazer's The Golden Bough (1920), and almost parodying them. Dystopian works have emerged as a reaction to or counter-attack on utopios. 'The words,'Shantih shantih shantih (433)" close The Waste Land and come out like an 'amen" to a Christian's prayers. The"amen refers onay to the wish that the prayers should be accepted: it does not guarantee that the wish will be granted or that salvation will be realized. Consequently, Eliot's dystopic The Waste Land does not lead nı salvation. and the suggested means for salvation totally lack in the here and the now. Metin Boşnak is a published poet, essayist, and scholar of Comparative Literature and American Studies at Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University.
    >